One dead, four wounded and more than a dozen shellings of the community - this is how the day passed in the Kherson region.

A 57-year-old man suffered fatal shrapnel wounds to the chest in the village of Lviv.

At night, Russian troops hit high-rise buildings in Kherson with mortars, and since the beginning of the day they have targeted private houses along the banks of the Dnieper, TSN reports. 

The place of one of the arrivals in Kherson is fenced off with a tape, the epicenter of the explosion fell on a concrete hatch, a block of which flew several tens of meters, and the fence was also damaged by debris.

Broken windows, metal and concrete fragments are scattered on the road and along the roadside. 

People look into the windows of the apartments of neighbors who have left.

After the night attack on the city, the calls from them do not stop, say the locals.

The authorities are compiling a list of those whose windows need to be sealed.

Now there is a gusty wind outside, and in the evening the temperature will drop to zero degrees.

"Now we will describe the damage, conduct material, help people sew up broken windows.

We are close to the strip where there is a rush and it is 5-6 seconds after we hear the sound," says Rostyslav Kulyk, head of the public works department of the Kherson district council.

This time, the killer iron did not fatally injure the locals.

Targeted shelling of residential areas is a daily reality for the people of Kherson and residents of villages living right on the banks of the river, along which the front line runs.

The village of 2,000 people, which survived the retreat of the Russian troops, accepts immigrants.

Here people receive food packages, warm clothes and drinking water.

Stocks, they say in the village council, are enough.

Volunteers bring humanitarian goods and baby food here every day.

Valery has already started to work on his 14 acres of land.

In addition to products, volunteers also bring seeds to the villagers.

The company where the husband and wife worked moved to Odesa after the beginning of the Great War.

There is no work in the surrounding villages because of the proximity to the front, so the man hopes for a good harvest and good weather.

He is glad that the village has been de-occupied since November and hopes that soon our military will manage to push the Russians away from Ukrainian land.

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